The countess had not, since her return from abroad, had time that winter to make a large circle of acquaintances in Petersburg and to establish her position as she had hoped and reckoned upon doing.
There was no one besides this gentleman, and no one else came in all the evening.
I looked about for Katerina Fyodorovna; she was in the next room with Alyosha, but hearing that we had arrived she came in at once.
The prince kissed her hand politely, and the countess motioned her towards me.
The prince at once introduced us.
I looked at her with impatient attention. She was a short, soft little blonde dressed in a white frock, with a mild and serene expression of face, with eyes of perfect blue, as Alyosha had said, she had the beauty of youth, that was all.
I had expected to meet the perfection of beauty, but it was not a case of beauty.
The regular, softly outlined oval of the face, the fairly correct features, the thick and really splendid hair, the simple and homely style in which it was arranged, the gentle, attentive expression – all this I should have passed by without paying special attention to it if I had met her elsewhere. But this was only the first impression, and I succeeded in getting a fuller insight into her in the course of that evening.
The very way in which she shook hands with me, standing looking into my face with a sort of naively exaggerated intentness, without saying a word, impressed me by its strangeness, and I could not help smiling at her.
It was evident, I felt at once, that I had before me a creature of the purest heart.
The countess watched her intently.
After shaking hands Katya walked away from me somewhat hurriedly, and sat down at the other end of the room with Alyosha.
As he greeted me Alyosha whispered:
“I’m only here for a minute. I’m just going there.”
The “diplomat,” I don’t know his name and call him a diplomat simply to call him something, talked calmly and majestically, developing some idea.
The countess listened to him attentively.
The prince gave him an encouraging and flattering smile. The orator often addressed himself to him, apparently appreciating him as a listener worthy of his attention.
They gave me some tea and left me in peace, for which I was very thankful.
Meanwhile I was looking at the countess.
At first sight she attracted me in spite of myself.
Perhaps she was no longer young, but she seemed to me not more than twentyeight.
Her face was still fresh, and in her first youth she must have been very beautiful.
Her dark. brown hair was still fairly thick; her expression was extremely kindly, but frivolous, and mischievously mocking.
But just now she was evidently keeping herself in check.
There was a look of great intelligence, too, in her eyes, but even more of goodnature and gaiety.
It seemed to me that her predominant characteristic was a certain levity, an eagerness for enjoyment, and a sort of goodnatured egoism; a great deal of egoism, perhaps, She was absolutely guided by the prince, who had an extraordinary influence on her.
I knew that they had a liaison; I had heard, too, that he had been anything but a jealous lover while they had been abroad; but I kept fancying, and I think so still, that apart from their former relations there was something else, some rather mysterious tie binding them together, something like a mutual obligation resting upon motives of selfinterest . . . in fact there certainly was something of the sort.
I knew, too, that by now the prince was tired of her, and yet their relations had not been broken off.
Perhaps what kept them together especially was their design for Katya,, which must have owed its initiative to the prince.
By persuading her to help him bring about Alyosha’s marriage with her stepdaughter, the prince had good reasons for getting out of marriage with the countess, which she really had urged upon him.
So, at least, I concluded from facts dropped in all simplicity by Alyosha; even he could not help noticing something.
I kept fancying, too, partly from Alyosha’s talk, that although the countess was completely under the prince’s control he had some reason for being afraid of her.
Even Alyosha had noticed this.
I learnt afterwards that the prince was very anxious to get the countess married to someone else, and that it was partly with that object he was sending her off to Simbirsk, hoping to pick up a suitable husband for her in the province.
I sat still and listened, not knowing how I could quickly secure a teteatete interview with Katerina Fyodorovna.
The diplomat was answering some questions of the countess’s about the present political position, about the reforms that were being instituted, and whether they were to be dreaded or not.
He said a great deal at great length, calmly, like one having authority.
He developed his idea subtly and cleverly, but the idea was a repulsive one.
He kept insisting that the whole spirit of reform and improvement would only too soon bring forth certain results, that seeing those results “they would come to their senses,” and that not only in society (that is, of course, in a certain part of it) would this spirit of reform pass away, but they would learn their mistake from experience, and then with redoubled energy would return to the old traditions; that the experience, though distressing, would be of great benefit, because it would teach them to maintain that salutary tradition, would give fresh grounds for doing so, and that consequently it was to be hoped that the extreme limit of recklessness would be reached as soon as possible.
“They cannot get on without us,” he concluded that no society has ever stood its ground without us.
We shall lose nothing. On the contrary we stand to win. We shall rise to the surface, and our motto at the moment should be ‘pire ca va, mieux ca est!’
Prince Valkovsky smiled to him with revolting sympathy.
The orator was completely satisfied with himself.
I was so stupid as to want to protest; my heart was boiling.
But what checked me was the malignant expression of the prince; he stole a glance in my direction, and it seemed to me that he was just expecting some strange and youthful outburst from me. Perhaps he even wanted this in order to enjoy my compromising myself.
Meanwhile I felt convinced that the diplomat would not notice my protest, nor perhaps me either.
It was revolting for me to sit with them; but Alyosha rescued me.
He came up to me quietly, touched me on the shoulder, and asked to have a few words with me.
I guessed he came with a message from Katya.
And so it was.